
This is clearly a key part of the Blu-Ray encryption process, and MakeMKV cannot handle it. Only one is correct, and MakeMKV doesn't know which one, so it wants to do them all. The scenes are all out of order for 299 of them. Most of the time there's like 300 versions of the film that it wants to import.

However, the deal-breaker is that it only works with about 15-25% of discs I've tried. It's not the most intuitive process and I wish you could pick other outputs, but it's all we've got. I get a nice gigantic mkv file that I can convert to a better (smaller) format. All features (including Blu-ray decryption and processing) are free during BETA.Functionality to open DVD discs is free and will always stay free.



It converts the video clips from the proprietary (and usually encrypted) disc into a set of MKV files, preserving most information but not changing it in any way. MakeMKV is a format converter, otherwise called "transcoder". MakeMKV is your one-click solution to convert video that you own into a free and patents-unencumbered format that can be played everywhere.
